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Miami Music Project To Received $30,000 From The National Endownment For The Arts

MIAMI, FL — National Endowment for the Arts Acting Chairman Mary Anne Carter has approved more than $80 million in grants as part of the Arts Endowment’s second major funding announcement for fiscal year 2019! Included in this announcement is an Art Works grant of $30,000 to Miami Music Project to support staff salaries and teaching artist fees for the Children's Orchestras, a free after-school instrumental music program for students in Miami-Dade County, Florida. Art Works is the Arts Endowment’s principal grantmaking program. The agency received 1,592 Art Works applications for this round of grantmaking, and will award 977 grants in this category.

childean develpment“These awards, reaching every corner of the United States, are a testament to the artistic richness and diversity in our country,” said Mary Anne Carter, acting chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts. “Organizations such as Miami Music Project are giving people in their community the opportunity to learn, create, and be inspired.”

This year, Miami Music Project celebrates a decade of providing socially transformative programing in Miami-Dade. In the past 10 years our programs have reached over 30,000 children and youth through a variety of program offerings, including over 3,700 who have participated in the NEA-funded Children’s Orchestras program, which started with only 15 students in 2010.

“Receiving this grant from the National Endowment for the Arts truly validates our programs, proving that the work we do matters and makes a difference in our community,” said Anna Klimala, Executive Director of the Miami Music Project. “While many talk about how important access to the arts is, not enough people put emphasis on how crucial music education is to the development of young minds and hearts. Our programs help increase this awareness by showing the direct impact our work has on young people and their futures.”

A study performed by FIU’s Community-Based Research Institute (CBRI) at Robert Stempel College of Public Health and Social Work has found that Miami Music Project’s rigorous orchestral model of musical instruction positively affects the behavior and development of school-aged children. Youth seem to acquire not only cognitive benefits but also a host of social and emotional enhancements. This proves that programs such as Miami Music Project not only provide quality arts education, but contribute to creating citizens and future leaders of our communities through the enhancement of the complex skills used while practicing an instrument and performing in orchestra-based ensembles.

For more information on this National Endowment for the Arts grant announcement, visitarts.gov/news.

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